From prehistoric art to a printing revolution…

Otley has its origins as a town in Saxon times, its name coming from Othe, Otho or Otta, a personal name, and the Old English for a wood clearing … but its history dates much further back.

The Wharfedale Valley was carved with the melting of Ice Age glaciers that left behind the dramatic landscapes that surround the town today – and those landscapes hold the key to Otley’s real age. The Chevin that overlooks the town is home to megalithic stone boundaries and paleolithic rock art that mysteriously comes to life when wet, while a Roman road across its highest points once linked York, Tadcaster and Ilkley.

In the town itself, the Parish Church displays remnants of its Saxon heritage thanks to a selection of stone crosses dating from the earliest Christians who came to live here – in the 7th century, Otley was part of an extensive manor between the rivers Humber and Tyne.

Cattle markets began in the town in 1222 defining its future for almost 800 years, and in 1644 the Market Square played host to Oliver Cromwell’s Parliamentarian army on the eve of the Battle of Marston Moor. It’s said they drank the pubs dry before their famous victory!

With the advent of the Industrial Revolution a woollen industry began and the 18th and 19th centuries saw much progress, at a time when Otley helped shaped the very history of Britain.  The Otley Courthouse was built in this period and housed the police and fire station as well as the courthouse. One wing of the building was the home of the police superintendent.

The Courthouse now houses a thriving Arts Centre with regular performances of music, comedy drama and film. Tours of the building are possible by appointment and one of the old prison cells is still in its original condition. The railway came to Otley in the mid-19th century, sadly a victim of the Beeching cuts of the 1960’s, but the Navvies’ Memorial in Church Lane bears testament to the victims of the building of the Railway.

The Wharfedale printing press, developed by David Payne in the 1850s was the first real development in printing since the famous Gutenberg Bible was printed on a wooden press in 1654. The Wharfedale press allowed continuous sheet printing without the need for stopping after every sheet. Up to 1,500 sheets per hour could be printed on these machines and by 1911 over 2,000 people were employed at the various sites in Otley making these presses that were exported all over the world. There are several plaques around Otley chronicling the various productions sites, the names Payne, Dawson, Elliot being associated with the press and its development. A Wharfedale press is one of the many artefacts at the Otley Museum.

Other industries which grew in Otley in Victorian times were the paper, candle and leather industries, now all long gone.

Stone quarried from the Chevin was used to help build the Houses of Parliament and famed cabinetmaker Thomas Chippendale was born in Otley in 1718. Educated at Prince Henry’s Grammar School, his 1754 publication The Gentleman and Cabinet Maker’s Director is widely thought to be the first book on interior design.

As Otley’s fame grew, it began to attract the great and good, with romanticist painter JMW Turner spending much time at nearby Farnley Hall. The dramatic landscapes around Wharfedale were used as backdrop to some of his most famous paintings. The then Lord of the manor Walter Ramsden Fawkes was closely related to the not so great and infamous Guy.

Top five must-sees
    • The Knotties Stone on Otley Chevin – some of the oldest prehistoric rock art in the county
      • The Black Bull on Market Square – gathering place for Cromwell’s Army before the Battle of Marston Moor
        • Thomas Chippendale statue – outside the Old Grammar School in Manor Square
          • The Navvies’ Memorial which commemorates the sacrifice made by 23 men during the building of the railway tunnel in Bramhope
            • Otley Courthouse – the former police station and Magistrates Court, still retaining a prison cell and a history time line (now a popular arts centre)
            Click on the links below for more of Otley’s history and heritage